Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen

Calvin Morrison was minding his own business, just doing his job, when he saw a flash of light and a surprised stranger. Next thing Calvin knows is he’s not in Pennsylvania anymore. The landscape is right – the hills, the rivers, the mountains, but the cities and the roads and the houses, and all the people are gone! When Calvin does finally come across someone, they don’t speak any language he’s ever heard, although bits and pieces do sound familiar.

Calvin is of our time, as in, yours and mine. Little does he know of all the parallel timelines that exist, the Earths where something is just a little different. He certainly has no knowledge of the Paratime Police who keep it all running smoothly, and keep the Paratime secret a secret! Paratime Cop Verkan Vall is alerted to the situation, and a decision has got to be made: get Calvin out of there, or take a wait-and-see attitude. Calvin doesn’t know anything about anything, how could he possibly share the paratime secret? Besides, they’ll have to find him first.

A resourceful man, Calvin falls in with Prince Ptosphes and his beautiful daughter Rylla. Ptosphes is the ruler of Hostigos, and war is on the horizon. They can’t quite say his name, so call him Kalvan. The highest technology to be found is gunpowder, and how it works in a controlled secret. Controlled in a pretty unique way, actually, for the region is subjugated by a gunpowder theocracy (Yes, I just said Gunpowder Theocracy. How cool does that sound!). The religious order of Styphon’s House provides gunpowder to the cities and families who support them. It’s pretty easy to see how the priests would be welcoming into the cities and villages, yet resented as well. But Calvin knows the secret of gunpowder. He’s a history buff, and a soldier. He teaches the people of Hostigos how to make it, with the promise that they will teach everyone in the neighboring cities, even the cities they are at war with. It’s not the other cities that are the enemy of Hostigos, it’s Styphon’s House.

Verkan Vall poses as a trader to meet with Calvin, and all is a Verkan suspected – the guy knows nothing of any use. He might be giving the Hostigans the secrets of gunpower, creating paper, and organizing a military force, but he’s never going to give them the secret of the Paratime Police, that’s for sure. Since he doesn’t know anything, they might as well let him live and see what he accomplishes there, right?

This was a really fun book to read. Calvin has a great character voice. For someone who was plucked out of his life, and thrown into a new one where he doesn’t know a damn thing about how anything works, he performs admirably. I especially liked how he keeps running notes of things to teach the Hostigans about, such as:

He tells the truth of where he’s from to Rylla, Ptosphes, and a select few others. But to everyone else, he’s just the Prince from a faraway land. Kalvan’s fame grows, and so do his enemies. but he’s a tough guy, so he’ll see it through just fine. The more time he spends in Hostigos, the less he refers to himself as Calvin Morrison, police officer, and the more he refers to himself as Lord Kalvan. This is a guy who knows he’s never going home. And there’s something very tragic in that.

You know I know Kage Baker’s Company books, so of course I was going to love a story about parallel worlds and time travel. Piper isn’t breaking any molds here – Kalvan is perfect heroic “white hat”, the scheming Styphon priests are the evil “black hats”, and unfortunately Rylla is demoted to second tier character as soon as she falls in love with Kalvan, which is about a week after meeting him.

Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen is the longest and last written Paratime novel. Earlier short stories and a novella were written in the 1950s, and collected in “Paratime”.

My only issue with Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen was the end. The story reaches a climactic ending with Hostigos and many of the other city states going to war against Styphon. There is about 40 pages of very detailed military minutae, and frankly, I found it boring. I blame user error, because I’ve never enjoyed that kind of thing. Readers who enjoy military history, or military science fiction will find a lot to enjoy!

If you’ve never read H Beam Piper, I suggest starting with his famous Little Fuzzy. However, if you see Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen at the used bookstore, it’s worth picking up.

Little Fuzzy is a good suggestion, but the Paratime books are better, I think. BTW, I don’t have a lot good to say of the “updated” or remained, version of Little Fuzzy done by Scalzi. Read the original.

I read this a couple years ago, as part of the “Time Wars” anthology created by Poul Anderson and edited by Charles Waugh & Martin H. Greenberg. It was good stuff, also introduced me to Anderson’s Time Patrol stories, plus a couple other authors I keep an eye out for whenever I hit the used bookstores…..Sooner or later I’m going to read/review the whole Paratime cycle…..

I really enjoyed Lord Kalvan. :D It’s not the deepest book, as you point out, but it stands head and shoulders over the other similar titles I’ve read (Jerry Pournelle’s Janissaries, etc). I don’t think it hurts that I’m the target audience for the military history talk!

FTC Stuff

some of the books reviewed here were free ARCs supplied by publishers/authors/other groups. Some of the books here I got from the library. the rest I *gasp!* actually paid for. I'll do my best to let you know what's what.